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Article 29 Working Party Releases Opinion on Facial Recognition Technology

Hunton Privacy

On March 22, 2012, the Article 29 Working Party (the “Working Party”), adopted an Opinion analyzing the privacy and data protection law framework applicable to the use of facial recognition technology in online and mobile services, such as social networks and smartphones.

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The Burden of Privacy In Discovery

Data Matters

Relatively recent advances in technology — smartphones and social media, in particular — have allowed businesses to collect, store, and find ways to monetize far more personal data than ever before. For example, in John B. The principle of proportionality in civil discovery is hardly new.4

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The debate on the Data Protection Bill in the House of Lords

Data Protector

What follows below is an edited version of the debate in the House of Lords of the Second Reading of the Data Protection Bill, held on 10 October. The Bill provides for her to continue to provide independent oversight, supervising our systems of data protection, but we are also significantly enhancing her powers.

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How to Track Your Kids (and Other People's Kids) With the TicTocTrack Watch

Troy Hunt

For example, there was VTech back in 2015 who leaked millions of kids' info after they registered with "smart" tablets. Mobiispy leaked data. The Gator3 watch turned out to have even more serious security flaws, storing parents and kids’ voice messages on an openly available webserver. And that's just a small slice of them.

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